Energy in the 21st century
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')n auspicious wind is blowing across Colorado and the West as rural communities begin seizing the opportunities of emerging 21st century economies and technologies. Much of the land that produces the food that feeds America is ideally situated to help meet the nation's appetite for electricity. Colorado's eastern plains are ripe with potential for wind and biofuels development, and all of Colorado is a veritable breadbasket of solar energy.
One of the biggest is a reluctance by many utilities and power merchants to develop new ways of doing business that take advantage of technological advances allowing them both to integrate economical renewable energy projects and to reduce the financial risks of continuing their business-as-usual approach.
There are currently 150 new coal-fired power plants on the drawing board or under construction nationwide, roughly three dozen of them in the West. Every conventional power plant built, burning pulverized coal to generate electricity, will operate for decades, locking up billions of dollars in capital that could - and should - be invested in clean energy. Similarly, every electron moved by conventional coal plants ties up capacity that could be freed up for transmission of clean energy.
More importantly, coal entails significant financial risks due to issues such as future greenhouse gas regulations, rising coal production costs, rail constraints, and rapidly escalating construction costs. Building more large centralized coal plants burdens ratepayers, especially those in rural areas, with the potential for significant rate increases to cover those costs.
In fact, according to an in-depth study by the National Renewable Energy Lab, the development of new wind energy in Colorado would return far higher dividends back to the community than either coal-fired power or natural gas. The 2006 study found that new wind facilities would have twice the direct economic impact of a similarly sized natural gas plant and more than three times coal, ultimately giving the state, local governments and private landowners hundreds of millions of dollars more than the fossil fuel plants.






It cant be that horrible, at least not in the long term..
